Making Things Happen 2: Motor Disorders
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1 Making Things Happen 2: Motor Disorders How Your Brain Works Prof. Jan Schnupp HowYourBrainWorks.net
2 On the Menu in This Lecture In the previous lecture we saw how motor cortex and spinal cord control skeletal muscle movements. But cortex does not control movements all by itself it gets help from: The cerebellum appears to be set up to learn associations between sensory inputs (and feedback) and motor intentions, making outcomes of motor commands more predictable and movements more coordinated. The basal ganglia appear to filter spontaneous, selfguided movements, and setting overall activity levels. Think of the cerebellum as helping the brain answer the question: How do I get my movements to achieve their desired result given my current environment?, and the basal ganglia help answer the question What, are the things that I want to do in the first place?
3 Subcortical Motor Structures
4 Cerebellum The cerebellum gets inputs from motor and sensory cortex (via the pons) as well as from spinal cord and the vestibular system (sense of balance). It sends outputs back to motor cortex via deep cerebellar nuclei and thalamus.
5 Cerebellum Inputs and Outputs The dentate nucleus shown here is one of the deep cerebellar nuclei. For the purposes of these lectures you can ignore the red nucleus.
6 Cerebellar Circuits Many more motor cortex neurons project to pontine nuclei and from there on to cerebellum than project directly to spinal cord. Input from the pons forms mossy fiber input onto granule cells in cerebellar cortex. Granule cells form parallel fibers which synapse onto Purkinje cells. Purkinje cells are thought to learn associations between parallel fiber inputs using climbing fiber inputs from the inferior olive as teaching input.
7 Cerebellar Ataxia and Intention Tremor
8 The Basal Ganglia GPi = globus pallidus internal segment GPe = globus pallidus external STN= subthalamic nucleus Sub Nig = Substantia Nigra (pars compacta)
9 Cortex Basal Ganglia Loops Motor cortex (particularly the SMA) is closely coupled to a loop through the basal ganglia (BG) The BG comprise: The putamen and caudate nucleus (collectively known as striatum) The globus pallidus, which has separate external and internal segments. The Substantia nigra, which has a pars compacta (SNc, which we will focus on) and a pars reticulata (SNr, which we will ignore) The ventral tegmental area (VTA), which can be thought of as an extension of the SNc The subthalamic nucleus (ST).
10 Cortex Basal Ganglia Loops 2 In the BG motor loop, activity can pass from cortex through the BG, from there to a nucleus of the thalamus, and from there back to cortex: Cortex projects to putamen (excitatory, glutamate) Putamen projects to GPi, either directly or indirectly, via GPe and (optionally) through STN. (Inhibitory, GABA). GPi projects to thalamus. (Inhibitory, GABA). Thalamus projects back to cortex (Excitatory, glutamate). These projections all occur in a somatotopic (homunculus) framework, i.e. activity starting from the hand region of motor cortex will return back to the hand region.
11 The Motor Loop Excitatory (Glutamatergic) connections shown in dark green Inhibitory (GABAergic) connections shown in red Dopaminergic connections shown in sky blue
12 Cortex Basal Ganglia Loops 3 Paths through the BG motor loop which have an even number of inhibitory connections in them are called the direct pathway : Ctx Put GPi Thal Ctx. Even numbers of inhibitions mean that inhibition is inhibited or taken away, so the direct pathway will amplify activity. Paths through the BG motor loop which have an odd number of inhibitory connections in them are called the indirect pathway : Ctx Put GPe GPi Thal Ctx or: Ctx Put GPe STN GPi Thal Ctx. Odd numbers of inhibitions mean that disinhibition is inhibited, so there will be more inhibition, less activity in Ctx, if the indirect pathway is more active.
13 Cortex Basal Ganglia Loops 4 Remember from the last lecture that motor cortical neurons represent movement intentions, and that they are spontaneously active. Think of that spontaneous activity as being filtered through the direct and indirect pathways, which can up-vote or down-vote that activity as it runs through the loops. Dopaminergic input from the SNc plays a big role in regulating and shaping the pathways through the BG. Tonic dopamine release from the SNc into Put will make the neurons of the direct path more active through D1 dopamine receptors and will make neurons of the indirect path less active through D2 dopamine receptors. Consequently, the more dopamine release, the more direct pathway activity and the more motor output.
14 Parkinson s Disease The cause of Parkinson s disease is a degeneration of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta. The most prominent symptoms are slowness of movement (bradykinesia), difficulty in initiating movements, and tremor.
15 Dopamine Biosynthesis and L-DOPA
16 An aside: Why Substantia Nigra neurons are Black: common biochemical pathways for dopamine and melanin.
17 Parkinsonian Resting Tremor & Bradykinesia
18 Parkinsonian Gait and L-DOPA treatment To treat Parkinsonism, patients are given L-DOPA to make the remaining SNc cells produce more dopamine. That can work quite well as long as the degeneration of the SNc is only partial.
19 Dyskinesia A common side-effect of L-DOPA therapy Too much dopamine produced: bad spontaneous motor ideas are also executed unfiltered. The case shown here is quite severe
20 Break
21 Michael Fox backs stem cell research The back to the future star suffers from quite severe early-onset Parkinsons. He would like to see stem-cell treatments developed to replace dead SNc neurons.
22 Cell Differentiation
23 The idea of stem cell therapy for PD is to make new dopaminergic neurons from stem cells to inject into the BG. But undifferentiated stem cells are rare in adults but very common in embryos. Religious pressure groups who (bizarrely) think of human embryos as people lobby hard to suppress research into human embryonic stem cells. Luckily scientists are getting better at re-differentiating adult human stem cells.
24 MPPP and MPTP MPPP is a synthetic heroin substitute MPTP is a contaminant that can arise from MPPP synthesis. It kills dopaminergic neurons and makes people (and animals) instantly severely Parkinsonian. Some successes have been reported in treating MPTP poisoned addicts with embryonic tissue grafts.
25 Deep Brain Stimulation DBS most commonly targets the subthalamic nucleus
26 Treating Parkinsonian Tremor with DBS DBS can be very effective at suppressing Parkinsonian tremor even when drug treatments no longer work. Attempts to use DBS for other disorders, including chronic depression or chronic pain syndromes have so far failed to give consistent positive results.
27 Huntington s Disease A genetic mutation of the HTT gene on chromosome 4 causes premature neural cell death in homozygous carriers. Spiny stellate neurons projecting from putamen to the GPe are the first affected. Damage to the indirect pathway: not enough inhibitory control on spontaneous movement. As the disease progresses, damage is more widespread.
28 Huntington s Chorea
29 Generalizing the Motor Loop Idea Beyond Low Level Motor Control Remember from last lecture that, as we go more frontal from primary motor cortex to prefrontal areas, we find neurons that appear to encode increasingly abstract motor intentions. (E.g. mirror neurons ). These more anterior structures, as well as limbic parts of the brain, also form loops through the basal ganglia (cognitive and limbic loops), which are also under dompaminergic control, in a manner that is quite similar to the motor loop.
30 The Forebrain: Loops Upon Loops
31 Mesolimbic Mesocortical Dopamine Pathways
32 Reported Prevalences of Behavioural and Psychiatric Symptoms in Huntington's disease[ Irritability 38 73% Apathy 34 76% Anxiety 34 61% Depressed mood 33 69% Obsessive and compulsive 10 52% Psychotic 3 11% Cognitive and limbic loops and their possible malfunctions gives us a theoretical framework which allows us to think about likely underlying causes of many psychiatric conditions, from OCD and mania to addiction.
33 Dopaminergic Antagonists Dopamine Chlorpromazine Numerous dopamine antagonists are used to treat a wide range of psychiatric diseases including obsessive-compulsive disorder, Tourette s syndrome, anxiety disorders and psychotic states. Parkinson-like symptoms are common side effects.
34 A Look Ahead Today s lecture revolved around the role of tonic Dopamine levels as a sort of thermostat of activity levels in motor, cognitive and limbic loops around the brain. However, the activity of dopaminergic neurons in the SNc and VTA also changes in a phasic manner that appears to predict how rewarding a particular activity is likely to be.
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